Lost: A Wife | |
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Directed by | William C. deMille |
Screenplay by | Clara Beranger |
Based on | Banco by Clare Kummer and Alfred Savoir |
Produced by | Jesse L. Lasky Adolph Zukor |
Starring | Adolphe Menjou Greta Nissen Robert Agnew Edgar Norton |
Cinematography | L. Guy Wilky |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 70 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | Silent (English intertitles) |
Lost: A Wife is a 1925 American silent comedy film directed by William C. deMille and written by Clara Beranger based upon a play by Clare Kummer and Alfred Savoir. The film stars Adolphe Menjou, Greta Nissen, Robert Agnew, Edgar Norton, Mario Carillo, and Genaro Spagnoli. The film was released on July 13, 1925, by Paramount Pictures. [1] [2]
As described in a film magazine review, [3] Tony Hamilton bets his friends that Charlotte Randolph will not marry the duke that she is engaged to. Later, he wagers that she will marry him. He sweeps her off her feet with his violent love making and marries her that night. Formerly, his love had been for gambling. After their marriage he excuses himself for ten minutes to go to an adjacent room to try his luck at the roulette wheel. There he is induced by an old gambler to win the first battle of their married life or suffer defeat ever after. It results in Tony remaining in the gambling room 75 hours at the roulette wheel. Charlotte remains outside determined not to leave until he is with her, but at the end of that time she decides to leave him. He is called to his father in New York City and she goes to her mother in Paris. A year later he receives word that she has received her final divorce papers and will marry a French count. He speeds to France to prevent the marriage but is too late. He then follows them to the count's estate where he purposely puts his automobile in the ditch. He feigns a broken leg and is taken to home of the count who, not knowing the identity of Tony, asks him to remain in the house. When the count is called to a far corner of the estate by a blaze, Tony confronts Charlotte, telling her that their marriage was never dissolved and that he still loves her. They begin to play a game of cards which lasts all night. His gambling nature is revived and she reviles him, but he promises her that he will never gamble again. The count attempts to prevent the situation from going any further, but his mother enters to say that he does not deserve the young woman. Tony leaves with his bride.
With no prints of Lost: A Wife located in any film archives, it is considered a lost film. [4]
Little Miss Marker is an American Pre-Code 1934 comedy-drama film directed by Alexander Hall. It was written by William R. Lipman, Sam Hellman, and Gladys Lehman after a 1932 short story of the same name by Damon Runyon. It stars Shirley Temple, Adolphe Menjou and Dorothy Dell in a story about a young girl held as collateral by gangsters. It was Temple's first starring role in a major motion picture and was crucial to establishing her as a major film star. It was inducted into the National Film Registry by the Library of Congress in 1998 and has been remade several times.
Adolphe Jean Menjou was an American actor. His career spanned both silent films and talkies. He appeared in such films as Charlie Chaplin's A Woman of Paris, where he played the lead role; Stanley Kubrick's Paths of Glory with Kirk Douglas; Ernst Lubitsch's The Marriage Circle; The Sheik with Rudolph Valentino; Morocco with Marlene Dietrich and Gary Cooper; and A Star Is Born with Janet Gaynor and Fredric March, and was nominated for an Academy Award for The Front Page in 1931.
Greta Nissen was a Norwegian-American film and stage actress.
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In the Name of Love is a 1925 American silent comedy film directed by Howard Higgin and written by Sada Cowan. It is based on the play The Lady of Lyons by Edward Bulwer-Lytton. It stars Ricardo Cortez, Greta Nissen, Wallace Beery, Raymond Hatton, Lillian Leighton, Edythe Chapman, and Richard Arlen. It was released on August 10, 1925 by Paramount Pictures.
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The Circus Queen Murder is a 1933 American pre-Code mystery film directed by Roy William Neill and starring Adolphe Menjou, Donald Cook and Greta Nissen. It is the sequel to the 1932 film The Night Club Lady in which Menjou had also starred as Thatcher Colt. The film is based on a story by "Anthony Abbott", a pseudonym used by Fulton Oursler.